Centrally Banked Cryptocurrencies

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Abstract

Current cryptocurrencies, starting with Bitcoin, build a decentralized blockchain-based transaction ledger, maintained through proofs-of-work that also serve to generate a monetary supply. Such decentralization has benefits, such as independence from national political control, but also significant limitations in terms of computational costs and scalability. We introduce RSCoin, a cryptocurrency framework in which central banks maintain complete control over the monetary supply, but rely on a distributed set of authorities, or mintettes, to prevent double-spending. While monetary policy is centralized, RSCoin still provides strong transparency and auditability guarantees.We demonstrate, both theoretically and experimentally, the benefits of a modest degree of centralization, such as the elimination of wasteful hashing and a scalable system for avoiding doublespending attacks.

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Danezis, G., & Meiklejohn, S. (2016). Centrally Banked Cryptocurrencies. In 23rd Annual Network and Distributed System Security Symposium, NDSS 2016. The Internet Society. https://doi.org/10.14722/ndss.2016.23187

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